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CPGB online Friday October 19 2007
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From Andrew Murray
This standard reply
has been sent by Andrew Murray (Stop the War Coalition chair) in
response to the emails and protests by HOPI supporters over the exclusion
of the campaign
Dear Brother/Sister
Thank you for your communication re the decision of the officers of StWC
to decline the applications for affiliation from Communist Students and
Hands off the People of Iran. I think that three things should be made
clear concerning this:
First, the Stop the War Coalition is a voluntary body set up by individuals
and organisations to pursue particular political aims. As such no individual
or group has a “right” to membership of it. Like any voluntary organisation
(as opposed to a public body) we have the right to determine who may join
us. We have an elected leadership answerable under a democratic constitution
empowered to take these decisions in what we believe to be the best interests
of the movement we serve. Such decisions may, of course, be proved mistaken
by the course of subsequent events. But it is in no sense “censorship”
to take those decisions, since nobody is thereby denied their right to
publish or circulate material. Since our formation there have always been
anti-war people or organisations which have chosen to stay outside StWC,
just as there have been organisations to which we have denied affiliation
in the past.
Second, the issue is not StWC’s view of the Iranian regime. This is merely
a stick used to beat us by those wanting to divide the movement. The Iranian
regime is dictatorial and often brutal and is based on the denial of many
basic rights. We are no more “friends” of the Iranian regime than we were
friends of the Taliban in Afghanistan or Saddam in Iraq, to recall a couple
of the slanderous attacks made on us by warmongers down the years. The
main focus of StWC is, however, on challenging the policies of the British
government in respect of the war, which includes respecting the rights
of all peoples to self-determination. There are a number of organisations
working in solidarity with the Iranian people, and a number of StWC affiliates
participate in such activity as well. We have never believed it is correct
to cloud the movement’s objectives by placing issues of “regime change”
(which are ultimately the business of the peoples of the country concerned)
on an equal footing with stopping the war, or at least British involvement
in it. The latter is the reason for our existence. We have no fear of
debate on this issue - the sort of views advanced by Hands off the People
of Iran have been debated at almost every one of our conferences, and
have never received more than miniscule support.
Third, our decision in respect of these two organisations is, however,
political. Both are effectively controlled by the Weekly Worker group
(“CPGB”) – indeed their spokesman in the current controversy is the Weekly
Worker’s national organiser. This body has been hostile to StWC from its
inception. It declined to support the objectives of the Coalition, which
they now pray freely in aid, when they were first adopted in October 2001.Its
coverage of StWC activities is not merely critical, but usually abusive,
and reflects the attacks made by our pro-war opponents. It supported the
witch-hunting of George Galloway in 2003 and urged voters not to support
Jeremy Corbyn in the general election of 2005. When I was myself subject
to extensive attack in the pro-war media in 2003, the main lines of such
attack were echoed faithfully, with if anything added vitriol, in the
pages of the Weekly Worker. It seldom supports our activities – for example,
the successful march held on October 8 in defiance of a police ban was
neither promoted by the Weekly Worker in advance, nor attended on the
day by its supporters nor reported afterwards, for reasons one can only
guess at.
Indeed, Workers Weekly established Hands off the People of Iran at the
start of 2007 explicitly as an alternative to StWC and because it no longer
wished to support the Coalition – moves they had every right to take and
which follow logically from their hostility to us. But to seek to affiliate
many months later when they could have done at the time of their formation
if their solidarity with us was sincere, and on the eve of a conference
is, as I originally wrote, neither sympathetic nor supportive.
Even a cursory perusal of the material produced by Weekly Worker is testimony
to its antipathy to StWC. This is consistent with the disruptive role
it has played in a series of organisations in our movement over the last
25 years, which is why it has been praised by pro-war journalists like
David Aaronovich and pro-war websites like Harry’s Place. Naturally, Weekly
Worker has every right to pursue its own political agenda as it sees fit,
but StWC has no obligation to provide it with a platform. If activists
in the anti-war movement wish to debate the views of such groups – and
I have seen very little evidence that any do – then there are no doubt
opportunities available in their own publications and meetings.
From its inception, StWC has been a broad and tolerant organisation. Had
it been otherwise we could not have sustained the movement at the level
which has been done. Occasionally, however, we have to take prophylactic
measures to protect our integrity, and this is one of those cases.
The decisions taken by the Officers Group in this respect will be reported
to the next meeting of the national Steering Committee for ratification.
If either Communist Students of Hands off the People of Iran wish to make
written representations to that meeting, they will of course be afforded
the right to do so.
Yours,
Andrew Murray
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